The literature of middle Judaism, including the Epistle to the Hebrews, contains considerable temple symbolism. Through a careful examination of such symbolism, this study demonstrates that the wilderness tabernacle is not seen as an inferior copy of a heavenly sanctuary in Hebrews. Rather, it prefigures the eschatological dwelling of God with his people, which is pictured in Hebrews as a heavenly temple. This eschatological reality is inaugurated with the exaltation of Jesus to God’s right hand, and access to it is available proleptically to God’s people in the present. The literature of middle Judaism is explored in terms of the attitudes to the temple disclosed in the various documents. Some texts portray a positive attitude to the te...
The Tabernacle (Heb. mishkan), also referred to as the Tent of Meeting (Heb. ’ohel mo‘ed), was an an...
The nature of the problem addressed is the lack of a thorough discussion of the relationship of the ...
The Epistle to the Hebrews contains a definite movement motif. Many scholars have identified the mov...
The literature of middle Judaism, including the Epistle to the Hebrews, contains considerable temple...
The objective of this dissertation is to explore the meanings, significance, and functions of sacred...
At various points in Israel\u27s history, God dwelt in specific, significant places, most notably in...
“In antiquity a religion without a temple was unheard of. Christianity had no earthly temple, yet ha...
During the first century, Yeshua (Jesus) and the original Christians viewed the temple as God\u27s d...
This article shows how temples were viewed in biblical Israel and how the prophets understood the te...
Recent studies of the Qumran documents have stimulated new perspectives on ancient Jewish history an...
The picture of the heavenly sanctuary/temple is that of a model for the construction of the earthly ...
In this paper we looked through the Old Testament and focused on the Biblical passages describing te...
This study is about Jerusalem in the Bible and Al Quran based on eschatological paradigm (theology/p...
This project is the result of a process which began with an independent study of Hebrews I undertook...
The present dissertation investigates the function of the heavenly sanctuary/temple and its relation...
The Tabernacle (Heb. mishkan), also referred to as the Tent of Meeting (Heb. ’ohel mo‘ed), was an an...
The nature of the problem addressed is the lack of a thorough discussion of the relationship of the ...
The Epistle to the Hebrews contains a definite movement motif. Many scholars have identified the mov...
The literature of middle Judaism, including the Epistle to the Hebrews, contains considerable temple...
The objective of this dissertation is to explore the meanings, significance, and functions of sacred...
At various points in Israel\u27s history, God dwelt in specific, significant places, most notably in...
“In antiquity a religion without a temple was unheard of. Christianity had no earthly temple, yet ha...
During the first century, Yeshua (Jesus) and the original Christians viewed the temple as God\u27s d...
This article shows how temples were viewed in biblical Israel and how the prophets understood the te...
Recent studies of the Qumran documents have stimulated new perspectives on ancient Jewish history an...
The picture of the heavenly sanctuary/temple is that of a model for the construction of the earthly ...
In this paper we looked through the Old Testament and focused on the Biblical passages describing te...
This study is about Jerusalem in the Bible and Al Quran based on eschatological paradigm (theology/p...
This project is the result of a process which began with an independent study of Hebrews I undertook...
The present dissertation investigates the function of the heavenly sanctuary/temple and its relation...
The Tabernacle (Heb. mishkan), also referred to as the Tent of Meeting (Heb. ’ohel mo‘ed), was an an...
The nature of the problem addressed is the lack of a thorough discussion of the relationship of the ...
The Epistle to the Hebrews contains a definite movement motif. Many scholars have identified the mov...